News

HP introduced the HP Indigo 6K+ Digital Press, designed to meet the growing demands of digital label production.
Four cultural stewards of sustainability unpack how indigo embodies Black fashion’s legacy of labor, innovation, and enduring ...
Various plant species contain blue indigo pigment, but some have particular climate needs. Not so with Japanese indigo (Persicaria tinctoria), said Young, an annual that can be grown “pretty ...
Creams or Gels: Most beard dyes come in the form of creams or gels with a thick consistency, ideal for full coverage. However ...
Use Natural Plant Dyes to Infuse Memories Onto Fabrics Dyers say pigments can imprint a favorite color on clothing, quilts or even yarn and give them a way to connect with nature and preserve it.
This Earthshot Prize finalist is using DNA sequencing to create sustainable clothing dyes Chemically polluted rivers are so last season. These UK scientists are creating dyes from nature.
That’s precisely what UK-based company Colorifix is working on: a fabric-dyeing process that uses the DNA codes for colours found in nature and teaches microbes to recreate them. Founders Orr Yarkoni ...
Randy Battle visits Gretchen Johnson at the American Revolution Museum at Yorktown to learn about native and imported plants used to make dyes for fabric. Featured on VHG episode 2503, May 2025 ...
A Korean-born artist is passing down a centuries-old tradition to Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) students in Baltimore.
Working with natural indigo is both an art and a science. From soil to fabric, the plant connects people with historical dyeing traditions and provides an eco-friendly alternative to synthetic dyes.
Clothing dyes not only pollute the water, they're an enormous source of carbon emissions. Citizens of Humanity is now investing in carbon-conscious dyes.